Social phobia involves intense fear or anxiety about being judged negatively by others in social situations.
Phobia- an extreme and irrational fear of a particular object or situation.
Behaviourism suggests phobias are gained through classical conditioning and maintained through operant conditioning
One treatment for phobias is called flooding where a PT is exposed to their fearful stimuli
Another treatment for phobias is systematic desensitisation which involves relaxation techniques being used alongside exposure therapy
Operant conditioning
Learning based on the consequences of actions. Actions which have a good outcome through positive reinforcement (reward) or negative reinforcement (removal of something unpleasant) will be repeated. Actions which have a bad outcome (punishment) will not be repeated.
1. People develop phobias by classical conditioning - a neutral stimulus is paired with an unconditioned stimulus to produce the conditioned response (phobia)
2. Once somebody has developed a phobia, operant conditioning maintains it - people get anxious and the phobia, and this process reinforces the phobia
Operant conditioning can also explain how social phobia and agoraphobia develop - people are anxious about having a panic attack in a social situation or an open place because of their specific phobias, so they avoid these situations
Strengths: Barlow and Craske (1989) showed that in cases of people with a severe fear of driving, 50% had actually been involved in a road accident. Through classical conditioning, the road accident became the unconditioned stimulus that led to driving becoming the conditioned stimulus and the phobia
Weaknesses: Davey (1992) found that only 7% of spider phobics recalled having a traumatic experience with a spider. The explanation couldn't account for why the other 93% developed the phobia
Strengths: Zinbarg et al (1992) found that systematic desensitisation was the most effective of the currently known methods for treating phobias. It works very quickly, e.g. Ost et al (1991) found that anxiety was reduced in 90% of patients with a specific phobia after just one session of therapy
Weaknesses: Flooding can be problematic as some patients drop out of the therapy before the fear has been extinguished, then it can end up causing more anxiety than before therapy started
Systematic desensitisation as a treatment for spider phobia
Gilroy et al. (2003) followed a group of 42 patients who had systematic desensitisation as a treatment for their spider phobia over three 45 minutes sessions and she found that at both 3 and 33 months they were less fearful and more in control of their phobia compared to the control group, who had not had any sessions
Flooding is cost-effective, although individual flooding sessions are usually longer than systematic desensitisation sessions, fewer sessions are needed
Flooding works well with 'simple' phobias e.g. arachnaphobia (fear of spiders)
Limitations of flooding
Flooding can be very traumatic for the patient therefore it may be ethically compromised: Schumacher et al. (2015) found both patients and therapists rated flooding as significantly more stressful than systematic desensitisation
Flooding is less effective with more complex phobias, such as social phobias